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CH 7 Liquids and Solutions
CH 7 Liquids and Solutions
In this chapter, you will learn about the liquid state, one of the three states of matter. The
strength of interaction between the particles in a liquid is intermediate between that in a gas and that
in a solid state.
The most interesting aspect among the physical properties of a liquid is the mutual conversion
to the gas and to the liquid, namely, vaporization/evaporation and condensation between gas and
liquid. This is related to the widely used chemical process of distillation, one of the most important
and useful methods for purifying liquids. In addition, you will learn the phase rule as an extension of
gas/liquid interconversion.
In the latter half of this chapter, you will learn about liquids with two or more ingredients,
namely, solutions. Because solutions are often used in the laboratory, it is very important and
practical to understand solutions. The density and vapor pressure of a solution are particularly
important properties.
Gases are liquefied by cooling under an appropriate pressure. As the temperature lowers, the
kinetic energy of the gas molecules decreases; and it will become comparable to the intermolecular
attraction. Finally the intermolecular distances diminish to the point where the gas becomes liquid.
Liquids have a constant volume at constant temperature but do not have a constant shape. In
this regard, a liquid is like a gas. However, as far as the intermolecular distance is concerned, there
is a large difference between liquids and gases. 1.0 g of liquid water has a volume of ca. 1 cm3, but
water vapor occupies a volume of 1.69 x 103 cm3 at 373 K and 1 atm. You can estimate the
intermolecular distances for the two cases, and by comparing that data, you will realize the
difference between liquids and gases.
You have learned that the kinetic molecular theory assumes that the intermolecular interaction
in the gaseous state is negligibly small. In the case of the liquid phase, the situation is not so simple
because each molecule is surrounded by many other molecules and hence collisions may take place.
The first interesting observation of the molecular motion of liquids was that by Brown regarding the
curious movement of pollen floating on the surface of water. The origin of the Brownian motion is
the collision between pollen and tiny molecules of water and it was interpreted as follows: since the
magnitude and direction that each collision exerts on the pollen varies, pollen particles move
randomly.
It is possible to treat the motion of liquid particles using a simple mechanical model as in the
case of gas particles. However, the effect of colliding molecules or that of nearby molecules is so
large that it is not easy to treat the liquid quantitatively. In high school chemistry, only a rather
vague explanation was given for liquid motion, saying that the liquid state is intermediate between
the gaseous state and the solid state. Furthermore, it was explained that such entities as the kinetic
energy or the intermolecular distances of liquid particles are also intermediate between the gaseous
and solid states. Similarly the regularity of the relative positions of the particles was also considered
intermediate. That is the reason that there is not much quantitative description in high school
chemistry textbooks (Fig. 7.1).
This textbook also will avoid a microscopic treatment of liquids, and the various properties of
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Figure 7.1 Schematic representation of the movement of molecules in solids, liquids and gases.
As the temperature increases, the velocity of molecular motion, and hence the
kinetic energy of the molecules will become relatively larger than the intermolecular attraction.
Gas volumes can be compressed whereas the extent to which liquid volumes can be
compressed is rather small since the intermolecular distances are much shorter. In solids, each
molecule tends to occupy a fixed position. When the arrangement of molecules in the solid state is
regular, it is called a crystal. When pressure is applied to a crystal, the extent of solid compression
is smaller than that for liquids. When the solid melts, its volume increases by 10% in most cases.
This corresponds to the difference in the packing of molecules in the liquid and solid states.
Comparatively speaking, liquids are closer to solids than to gases.
Gaseous particles diffuse because they move rapidly. Liquid molecules move more slowly.
Particles in a solid never diffuse because the intermolecular attraction is so strong that the molecular
kinetic energy cannot overcome it.
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The vapor pressure of the liquid increases as the temperature rises. The pattern of the increase
is characteristic of the given liquid. As the temperature rises, the ratio of molecules that possess
sufficient energy to overcome the intermolecular interaction will increase (Fig. 7.3).
Figure 7.3 The temperature and the kinetic energy of molecules (T1 < T2)
The kinetic energy of molecules depends on the temperature. In fact the velocity of molecules at a given
temperature is not uniform; its divergence is governed by Boltzmanns distribution law. The shaded areas in
the figures correspond to the molecules that have sufficient kinetic energy to escape from the surface of the
liquid.
The vapor pressure increases as the temperature rises. Figure 7.4 show the relation between
temperature and vapor pressure for various liquids.
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hydrostatic pressure due to the height of liquid above the bubble. The state where bubbles are
vigorously generated is called boiling, and the temperature at which boiling takes place is called the
boiling point. The boiling point when the atmospheric pressure is 1 atm is called the normal
boiling point (Fig. 7.4). The boiling point will change depending on the atmospheric pressure. If the
atmospheric pressure is higher than 1 atm, the boiling point is higher than the normal boiling point
while if the atmospheric pressure is lower than 1 atm, the boiling point is lower than the normal
boiling point.
Figure 7.4 The relation between the temperature and the vapor pressure of some liquids
Draw a line parallel to the abscissa at 1 atm. The intersection of this line with each curve
corresponds to the normal boiling point.
The boiling point and its change with pressure is characteristic for each compound. Hence the
boiling point is one of the means for identifying substances. Identification of substances is now
carried out mostly with the aid of spectroscopic methods, but boiling point data are required for
reports on new liquids.
Boiling points are determined by molecular weight and the polarity of molecules. Among
molecules with the same kind of polar functional groups, the larger the molecular weight, the higher
is the boiling point. A good example of this is the homologue of hydrocarbons (Table 7.1). On the
other hand, even if the molecular weight is small, molecules with a large polarity will experience
strong intermolecular forces that make their boiling points higher. A good example of this is the
large difference between boiling points among a group of organic compounds that have much the
same molecular weight but different functional groups (Table 7.1). The high boiling point of water
is another good example (Ch. 3.4, Ch. 7.3).
The energy required converting liquids into gases at S.T.P. a) (0C, 1 atm) is called the heat of
vaporization. When gases condense into liquids, the same amount of heat is released. This is called
the heat of condensation.
a)
S.T.P. = standard temperature and pressure.
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There are some substances that tend to decompose gradually upon heating. Some such
substances are difficult to vaporize, although they are liquids at room temperature, because they
decompose before reaching the boiling point. Hence, not all substances have normal boiling points.
The process of vaporizing liquids and condensing their vapors in another vessel by cooling is
called distillation. This is the method most frequently used to purify a liquid. The origin of the
techniques of distillation can be traced back to the age of alchemy. A liquid mixture can be
separated into its component liquids using the difference in their boiling points. This technique is
called fractional distillation (Ch. 12.3).
It is not easy to generate and hold a vacuum. The simplest device to generate a vacuum is the
water aspirator, which can be found in any laboratory including laboratories of primary, middle and
high schools. The best vacuum obtained by the aspirator is the vapor pressure of water at that
temperature. A more sophisticated device is the oil rotatory pump that can generate a vacuum of 5 x
10-1 Torr.
With the aid of the powerful oil diffusion pump or the mercury diffusion pump, a vacuum of
10-3 Torr or better can be obtained. It is not easy to hold a vacuum. Without proper and careful
maintenance of the vacuum line, you cannot obtain the vacuum that should be attainable with that
apparatus.
When distilling substances that tend to decompose before reaching their boiling point, the
distillation may possibly be done in a sealed system under a vacuum. The boiling point will be
lowered depending on the degree of the vacuum attained. This technique is called vacuum
distillation.
So far our treatment of the mutual change between the three states of matter has focused on the
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liquid state. In other words, attention has been paid to the change between the liquid state and the
solid state, and between the liquid state and the gaseous state. For discussing the critical state of
substances, it is more appropriate to treat the three states simultaneously rather than to treat two out
of three states.
The phase diagram is a convenient way to present the state of a substance as a function of the
temperature and the pressure. As a typical example, the phase diagram of water is shown in Fig. 7.5.
In the phase diagram, it is assumed that the substance in question is completely isolated and there is
no incoming or outgoing of other substances to or from the system.
Your understanding of the phase diagram will be greatly aided by knowing Gibbs phase rule, a
relationship derived by the American mathematician-physicist Josiah Willard Gibbs (1839-1903) in
1876. His rule established that for any state of equilibrium among phases in a closed system, the
number of independent variables--called the degrees of freedom F--was equal to the number of
components C plus 2 minus the number of phases P. F = C + 2 - P.
Thus, within the single phase areas of the diagram, the number of independent variables is
2--temperature and pressure; when two phases are in equilibrium--as indicated by the lines
demarking the boundaries between two phases--only one variable is independent--either temperature
or pressure; and at the triple point where three phases are present--no variable is independent.
From the phase diagram, you can confirm what you already know, and furthermore, you can
learn what you do not yet know. For instance, the negative slope of the solid-liquid phase boundary
has important implications as stated within the right-hand diagram, namely, that when additional
pressure is applied to ice it melts and forms water. According to Le Chateliers' principle, when a
system at equilibrium is subjected to more pressure, the equilibrium shifts in a direction that nullifies
that change. That means that water will have a smaller volume, a higher density, than ice; and we
all have experienced that ice floats in water.
On the other hand, water confined in a vessel at a pressure of 0.0060 atm exists as a liquid at
low temperature, while at a temperature of 0.0098C, the three states of water coexist. This point is
called the triple point of water. There are no other points where the three states of water can
coexist.
In addition, the critical point (for water, 218 atm, 374C), which you have already learned, is
also indicated in the phase diagram. When the liquid changes into the gas phase at the critical point,
an intermediate state, a state between the liquid phase and the gas phase, emerges. In the phase
diagram the state above the critical point is not defined.
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7.4 Solutions
So far, the liquid of a one-component system, namely, a pure liquid, has been discussed. In the
liquid phase, a two- or multi-component system, that is, a solution, is also very important. A
solution consists of a liquid which can dissolve substances (the solvent) and substances soluble in it
(the solute). Solvents are not necessarily a liquid, but can be a solid or a gas if it can dissolve
substances. Such a system is called a disperse system. For a disperse system, the substance
corresponding to the solvent is called a dispersion (disperse) medium, while the substance
corresponding to the solute is called the dispersoid.
For both solutions and disperse systems, solutes may be solids, liquids or gases. Even when the
solute is a liquid, there is no difficulty in distinguishing the role of the solvent and the solute if the
quantity of the solute is smaller than that of the solvent. However, when the quantity of two entities
is not very different, it is difficult to decide which is the solvent and which the solute. In such a case
you can just call these component 1or component 2, etc.
(a) Concentration
The concentration of a solution is defined by one of the following expressions.
The right-side drawing of Fig.7.5 is an expansion of the phase diagram at 0C, 1 atm. When
pressure is applied at this point, the ice (or snow) state moves vertically to reach the point y. Here
water is in the liquid phase.
The pleasures of ice-skating are due to the negative slope of the ice-water phase line. The
pressure exerted by the blades due to the skater's weight melts the ice and reduces the friction
between blade and ice.
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given as below:
pA = pA0 xA
where pA0 is the vapor pressure of the pure liquid A at the same temperature. A similar relation holds
for the vapor pressure of B, pB.
The relation discovered by the French chemist Francois Marie Raoult (1830-1901) is called
Raoults law. For a solution in which Raoults law is valid, the interaction between individual
molecules of the two components is equal to the interaction between molecules of each component.
Such solutions are called ideal solutions. Fig. 7.6 shows the vapor pressure of an ideal solution as a
function of the concentration of the solute. The total pressure of the mixed gas is the sum of pA and
pB, according to Raoults law.
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Figure 7.7 The total and partial pressure of a real solution (25C)
The cause of deviation from ideal behavior is largely due to the magnitude of intermolecular
interaction. When mixing component A and component B causes absorption of heat from the
surroundings (endothermic), the intermolecular interaction between the two components is smaller
than that of each component, and a positive deviation from Raoults law will result. On the contrary,
when mixing causes the discharge of heat to the surroundings (exothermic), a negative deviation
from Raoults law will result.
When a hydrogen bond is formed between component A and component B, the tendency of one
component to escape from the other (i.e., evaporate) is weakened, and a negative deviation from
Raoults law will be observed. In conclusion, the cause of the deviation from Raoults law is much
the same as the cause of deviation of gases from the ideal.
where xA and xB are molar fractions, and nA and nB are the moles of each component. The equation
indicates that, for an ideal solution in which a nonvolatile solute is dissolved, the depression of the
vapor pressure is proportional to the molar fraction of the solute.
For a dilute solution where nA + nB is nearly equal to nA, the mole nB and mass molar
concentration mB are correlated by the following expression.
where MA is the molar mass of the solvent A. For a dilute ideal solution, the depression of the vapor
pressure is proportional to mB, the mass molar concentration of solute B.
The difference between the boiling points of solution and that of the solvent is called the
elevation of boiling point, Tf. For dilute solutions, the elevation of boiling point is proportional to
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Tb = Kb mB
where the proportionality constant Kb is a characteristic value for each solvent and called molar
elevation of boiling point.
A similar relation is valid when an ideal dilute solution is cooled to freezing. The freezing point
of a solution is lower than that of the pure solvent. The difference between the freezing point of
solution and that of the solvent is called the depression of freezing point, Tf. For dilute solutions,
the depression of freezing point is proportional to the mass molar concentration of the solute mB
Tf = Kf mB
where the proportionality constant Kb is a characteristic value for each solvent and called molar
depression of freezing point.
Table 7.3 Molar elevation of boiling points and molar depression of freezing points
In Table 7.3 some representative values of the molar elevation of boiling points and the molar
depression of freezing points are given. It is possible to determine the molar mass (molecular
weight) of the solute whose value is not yet known, using these values and the relations. Recently
molecular weight is more conveniently determined with the aid of the mass spectrometer. Before the
use of the mass spectrometer became routine, the molecular weight was generally determined by
either the elevation of boiling point or the depression of freezing point. For both methods, a certain
degree of error was unavoidable, and great skill was required to obtain accurate results.
Sample exercise 7.4 Molecular weight determination by the freezing point depression method.
An aqueous solution consisting of 100 g of H2O and 5.12 g of a substance A (whose molecular
weight is not known) froze at 0.280C. Using the data in Table 7.3, determine the molar mass of A.
Solution
The molar mass of A is M. By use of the molar depression of freezing point, M can be
determined as below.
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V = nRT
where is the osmotic pressure, V the volume, T the absolute temperature, n the quantity of
substance (mol) and R the gas constant. You can see the formal similarity between this equation and
the equation of state of gases. As is the case with the equation of state of gases, it is possible to
determine the molecular weight of the solute from the above equation.
(f) Viscosity
Large intermolecular attraction in a liquid results in a high viscosity. The coefficient of
viscosity is defined as the liquids resistance to flow. A gas also has some viscosity, but its
magnitude is negligibly small. In certain cases it has a significant role for, e.g., airplanes.
Viscosity
(1) The viscosity of a liquid with large and irregular-shaped particles is higher than that of one with
small and regular-shaped particles.
(2) The higher the temperature of a liquid, the lower its viscosity.
These two points can be explained in terms of kinetic theory. The collision between spherical
or nearly spherical particles is an elastic or a nearly elastic collision. However, the collision between
irregularly shaped particles tends to be inelastic. In an inelastic collision, a part of the translational
energy is converted to vibrational energy, and consequently the particles will become difficult to
move, and will tend to coagulate. The effect of temperature is similar with that for gases.
The coefficient of viscosity is also called simply viscosity and is expressed by N s m-2 in SI.
When a sphere of radius a moves in a liquid whose viscosity is h with the velocity U, the resistance
D against the sphere is given as below.
D = 6haU
This relation (Stokes' law) was discovered by the British physicist George Gabriel Stokes
(1819-1903).
Generally speaking, no matter how large a pressure is applied, gases will not liquefy at the
critical temperature or above it. However, if the temperature of the gases approaches its critical
temperature at high pressure, a state is attained where the gas has the properties and density close to
the liquid. Materials in such a state are called supercritical fluids. The supercritical fluid has a
much stronger dissolving power compared with that of the pure liquid state of the same substance.
Furthermore, it can dissolve and separate solutes much more quickly. For this reason, extraction and
separation with the aid of supercritical fluids will give results different from those with the
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conventional solvents.
In 1978, carbon dioxide in a supercritical state was successfully employed to remove caffeine
from coffee. Since then, extraction with supercritical fluids has been widely employed in the field of
food and pharmaceutical industries.
It is expected that a reaction in a supercritical fluid will proceed in a different manner compared
with the reaction in a conventional solvent. Catalytic reactions in supercritical fluids have attracted
attention. The efficiency of the catalyst is expected to be more than ten times as high as that in
normal reactions. It was proposed that the concentration of the solute could be kept higher than in
the normal liquid.
= rhdg/2
where h is the height of the ascended of the liquid, r is the radius of the capillary and g is the
gravitational acceleration. Thus, the surface tension can be determined by experiment.
Exercise
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7.2 Answers
A: solid, B: liquidC: vapor (gas), D: solid + vapor, E: solid + liquid +vaporF: liquid + vapor, G:
liquid + vapor, H: vapor, triple point: E: critical point: G: normal freezing point: the point where the
solid phase - liquid phase curve corresponds to 1 atm, H: normal boiling point: the point where the
liquid phase - gas phase curve corresponds to 1 atm.
The amount of substance of H2SO4 dissolved in 1 dm3 of the dilute sulfuric acid (i.e., the molar
concentration) is
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